VlW T TV -fl 1H -104 Kntered at Portland (Oreon) PORTLAND OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1920 TRICE FIVE CENTS . ------ - Pm-tomce a i Second-Class Matter. PROOF OF OVERT WILSON TAKES RIDE ABOUT WASHINGTON DRY AGENTS BATTLE CONGRESS COUNTERS ANY SOLDIER RELIEF FILM STAR GETS FRIENDS DETERMINE. TO RESCUE TREATY SHIP'S CREW IN. DARK SPLENDID STATE i RAID OX ITALIAX CRAFT XETS . o3 7 BOTTLES OF COGXAC. OF i MOTOR JACXT FIRST IX FIVE i MONTHS FOR PRESIDENT. MOST OPPRESSIVE TAXATION IX WORLD HELD RESULT. REPUBLICANS AXD DEMOCRATS JOIX IX MOVEMENT. SOVIET REIGNS EN POLITICS CHARGED ACT-HELD M SS NG HUSBAND :.- -3. .4 :1 1 '5 la. i y Is GRIMM NOT SHOWN IN RAID 1. W. W.- Declared to Have Failed to Make Point. DEFENSE OFFER REJECTED ffcftiniony as to Meetings in .Which Plans Arc Said to Have Been Made Against Reds Halted. BV BEX HIT. LAMPMAJ. MONTESANO, Wash., March 3. (Special.) Definite refusal to admit proof of an alleged conspiracy against the Ccntralia I. W. W. until the nection of Warren O. Grimm be proved, was handed down in superior court this afternoon by Judge John 111. Wilson, presiding. , This recurrent phase of the trial of the ten I. W. W. aroused of Grimm's murder during the armistice day parade tragedy came to its focus at noon today, when J ml pre Wilson for the third time ruled such evidence Inadmissible. After the ruling George F. Vander veer, counsel for the accused, made an offer of proof, which entered the records, in the absence of the jury, and which was declined by the court in conformance with the earlier rul ing. The statement made by Vanderveer respecting the alleged proof that Cen tralia business Interests did conspire against the I. W. W., threaten to raid their hall and otherwise evict them from the city, has no bearing on the trial itself, was not heard by the jury, and is merely for the guidance of the supreme court in reviewing the case if an appeal should be taken. Evidence I-atlls, Says Court. ' i The strife between counsel for state and defense, as to the admissibility ef testimony concerning the purport ed plot, occupied nearly the entire session. During the forenoon session and until the noon recess, Judge Wil-i on heard the arguments, which cen tered about the question of whether Cirimm knew of the purported raid or had committed an overt act before lie received his wound. "The court is of the opinion that the evidence falls far short of being sufficient to show an overt act on tue part of the deceased," ruled Judge Wilson,' "and there must be a con certed act shown on the part of the deceased before any act of the co conspirators, or alleged co-conspirators, can be shown which would af fect the shooting or justify the shoot ing of the deceased Grimm." Vanderveer offered to prove, by the testimony of a number of witnesses, the following allegations: That on June IT, 191!, there was or ganized in Ccntralia a branch of the employers' association of Washington Jknown as the Citizens' Protective league, and that Y. B. Hubbard of Ccntralia was chosen as its organiza tion head. That addressing this meeting was George F. Russell, manager of the atate employers" association, and that Russell told the assembled business men that steps must be taken to com bat the radicals, particularly the I. V. W., who seemed to be better or gan ied than the employers. That on the evening of October 20, 1J19, a meeting of this league was Jield in the Elks' clubrooms, Cen tralia, with William Scales as chair man, and that at this meeting discus sion arose concerning means of rid ding the city of the I. W. W. That Chief of Police Hughes of Ccntralia and Councilman Saunders addressed the assembly and said that they had consulted the prosecuting atttorncy and the city attorney and had been informed that the I. W.' W. Mere within their lawful rights in maintaining a hall and could not be removed. . Committee Reported Chosen. That William Scales, chairman, said that he did not favor violent action, but that no jury would convict men who did raid, the hall. That K. B. Hubbard declared that if he were chief of police he would rid Centralia of the I. W. W. within 24 hours and that he branded Henry, labor representative, who refused to serve on a committee, as a "skunk" because he declined to be party to the plan. That at the close of the meeting the chairman announced that a com mittee would be secretly appointed to deal with the situation according to its own methods, and that a commit tee of 10 or 12 was accordingly ap pointed. Vanderveer offered further proof with respect to a meeting of the Lewis county trades council where , the rumored raid was discussed, and proof that Harry Smith, brother of the defendant, Klmer Smith, was pres ent at the meeting and reported the discussion to Elmer Smith. That following this meeting one of the officers of the trades council re ported the discussion to Chief of Po lice Hughes of Centralia and was told that the business men of Centralia had decided to run the I. W. W. out of own and raid their hall. That after the meeting of the com mercial interests on October 20 a ACunciHtted, ea JTAge 3, Culumn Conspiracy Evidence Stopped by Court. I Dr. Grayson Says Much Good Re sults From Outing in Balmy Air; Executive Enjoys Trip. WASHINGTON, March 3. Lured by balmy spring weather, the first of the season, President Wilson went on a motor jaunt about the city today. It was the first time he had left the White House grounds since he was j pui to Dea, a very sick man, nyc months ago today, on his return from his interrupted western f speaking tour. Mr. Wilson told Mrs. Wilson and Rear-Admiral Cary T. Grayson, whp accompanied him, that he felt as though he had been away from Wash ington a long time. For more than an hour the presi dent drove, through the city streets and the capitol grounds, where he waved a friendly greeting to Senator Horah of Idaho, one of the hicf op ponents of the peace treaty. The sen ator returned the salutation. The president was recognized by many persons and returned their greetings as the White House lim ousine rolled along at an easy gait, escorted by another machine carry ing secret service men. Passing the vicinity of a market house, the president, who delights al- conways in reading signs when he is motoring, saw a large sign q"w"B pork at 3 cents a pound. Although he has given much serious considera tion to the high cost of living, the president remarked to Mrs. Wilson That brings it home to you when you see a big sign like that." I "Deliirhted and much benefited by his trip," was the way Dr. Grayson characterized the president's attitude when he returned to the White House. The president. Dr. Grayson, said probajly will not go out driving every day for a time. Almost ideal weather prevailed for the president's ride. The car was kept closed throughout the trip, how ever. Photographers were prohibited from taking photographs. FAMILY'S PLIGHT PITIFUL Father in Jail, Daughter Dead, Otliors III With Influenza. EUGENE,' Or., March 3. (Special.) Martin Clark, who is alleged to have slain Charles L. Taylor here last July, was allowed yesterday to attend the funeral services of his daughter Ethel, 17 years old, who died recently from the influenza. He was escorted by Sheriff Stickels to Springfield, where the funeral took place, and later was returned to jail. The girl had been working in the telephone exchange to help provide for her mother, brothers and sisters. All others of th family are down with influenza. Citizens of Springfield say that the entire family of eight people, counting the mother, have been, forced, because of their pov erty, to occupy two beds while .11. -- . OUIJA RITES ARE WEIRD Human Hair and Money Are Burnt Offering to Spirits. MARTINEZ, Cal., March 3 Three men and two women arrested today in a house in El Cerrilo, near here, while.conducting strange rites over a ouija board, were brought here to night and held on insanity charges. City Marshal MacKinnon or El Cer rilo said the prisoners had clipped the hair of several small children who were with them in the house, and were burning it as an offering to spir its. Previously, he said,, they had burned $700 'in currency, also as an offering. The five were booked as Mrs. Jen nie Morto, Mrs. S. Botini, Charles Sol davini, -Richard Roe and John Doe. U. S. NOT PARTICIPATING Xavy Connection With Affairs Dardanelles Denied.. LONDON, March 3. There has been no intention, and there is none now, of American naval participation in the Dardanelles, according to an nouncement here. The normal Amer ican force in Turkish waters com prises six , destroyers and the Gal veston and Scorpion. Two destroyers were recently sent to the Black sea to relieve two others and remained temporarily at the re quest of Rear Admiral Bristol, who feared they might be needed for refugee work in consequence of the bolsheviki reaching the coast. STRIKE DECLARED ENDED Sacramento Electricians Vote fori Return to Work. SACRAMENTO, Cal.. March 3. Electrical workers in Sacramento em ployed by the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph company, voted today to return to work tomorrow, the past president of the local- union said. The union statement added that Sacramento had been considered as the key city during the strikTe. and j the action taken here probably would i be followed eewhere in California. : The men had asked for an increase of pay. About 40 were out here, most ly linemen. RED CAPTURES REPORTED Officer Prisoners Taken at Odessa Xumbcr 1503. LONDON, March The red forces in the capture of Odessa took prisoner 1503 officers, including five generals and 217 colonels. This information was received here Igday. bx wireless Uam Jlostu. Bolshevik Chiefs Live in Palace of Czars. BAYONETS IN KREMLIN HALLS Lenine's Communist Rule Not Real Communism. MONEY CAN BUY ANYTHING Equality of .Material Possessions Is X o n-E x I s t c n t Proletarian "Bourgcoise" Fast Developing. BY LINCOLN ETItE. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) RIGA (by courier to Berlin), Feb. 26. In wartime France, England or Germany no man could obtain for love or money more than a specified maximum of food, fuel or the house hold requirements. In wartime and revolutionary Russia, ruled by a com munist dictatorship, any man with enougn, mousana ruuie notes can buy all the food and warmth he desires. inrougnout the war, dwellers in London, Paris or Berlin affected by war conditions (and that meant prac tically everybody) were freed of pay ing rent by a moratorium. Residents of Moscow and Petrograd are still obliged to pay rent and at a far high er figure than in pre-war days. Impotency Held Proved. These two incontrovertible facts are evidence that an all-powerful bolshe vik in the communist government has in two years installed a lesser meas ure of communism in actual practice than existed in the belligerent Euro pean countries during the war years. To my mjind this is one of the se verest, albeit the most rarely men tioned, indictments of the bolsheviks' vast communistic programme, since it reveals their impotency to attain their, initial aim the abolition of classes. They claim, however, that when the war blockade and country revolutionary uprisings no longer ha rass them they will soon overcome speculation and other evils that fos ter inequality and thereby menace realization of communism. Soviet Arguments Set Forth. They argue, moreover, that inas much as existing abnormal circum stances make these evils unavoidable. their temporary toleration by the so- I viet government shows the latter's realistic grasp on the situation, which in turn demonstrates its ability to govern. They point out that the revolution meaning, of course, the bolshevik revolution of November 7, 1917 was not expected to establish communism overnight. It was merely expected to establish the dictatorship of the proletariat as a first step to ward the socialist commonwealth sought by the disciples of Karl Marx. The dictatorship of the proletariat means simply the forcible seizure by the industrial workers and peasants or small farmers ot the national gov ernment and national wealth, includ ing all organs or production. In other words, the propertied classes are dis possessed in favor of the non-propertied class. Capital Still Accumulated. In order that the dictators in the mass of workers and peasants shall (Concluded on Page 3. Column 3.1 V-7 '" v- ; . TRIMMED. m 4 . . -am - --i- . i IT I I Ur K.J I I r s-vrt-w"- IUllll.Mav 1111 a 1 isllftk' - S-o i.:,! vmv.- rv "r,x -y&ZL wm w v r ajv 1 y x If. V .St 1 I . i,j-wt -mi,i,,nn it - . I I I Liglrts Switched Off and Sailors Hurl Missiles When Search , Begins. NEW YORK, March, 3. Government agents were victorious in the first pitched battle to result here from enforcement of the prohibition law and'tWay triumphantly gave the cus toms" authorities 537 bottles of cognac, seized aboard the Italian steamship President Wilson. Besieged on all sides uy many members of the crew, who switched off lights far down in the chip's interior and smashed bottles by flinging pieces of iron, a half dozen men from the office of Thomas, E. Rush, inspector of the port, finally carried the liquor off the ship. John Sterling, one of the inspectors, went aboard the President. Wilson to day and found some of the men armed with saw-edged brass knuckles. He failed to find any more liquor, how ever, and came off the ship unmo tested. Albert Holkensen, who led the raid ing party, received threatening tele phone calls today from men who re fused to reveal their identity. The President Wilson arrived from Trieste Thursday and government agents conducted searches at various times. It was revealed today that li quor was found in the fire room, the cook's quarters, the bakery, the quar termaster's room and in the bilge. When the three inspectors entered the firemen's quarters about 80 men were in their bunks. The crew re garded them indifferently and were aroused only when the searchers found suspicious lumps in the bunk mattresses, three of which contained 30 bottles each, and from beneath fa.lse bottoms in the men's lockers and from behind a bulkhead 21 bottles were produced. Suddenly the lights were switched off and the framework of an iron bunk was hurled among the bottles. Then the men leaped from their bunks and in a moment the quarters were in confusion. The crew shouted and fought, but the inspectors, taking ad vantage of the gloom, edged their way througltthe door, where the light switch was finally turned on. Holkensen thereupon sent for as sistance and when three more inspec tors arrived, the crew was driven aside and the liquor seized. Holken sen,. Sterling and Christian Schmidt also seized ban Domes oi cunt aboard the steamship Morro Castle and Monterey from Havana and 150 bottles of Bacardi rum on the Steam ship Manmar, fror- Antilla, Cuba. The rum was found oeneath 150 fathoms of anchor chain, so heavy that it could be moved only with a steam winch. ROYALTIES DOUBLE TAXED Authors, Artists and Composers Must Pay Full Rates. WASHINGTON. D. C, March 3. Royalties received by authors, artists, composers and others cannot be classed as dividends and are subject to nominal tax as well as surtax. In ternal Revenue Commissioner Roper ruled today. Dividends are subject to taxes paid by the distributing company, being a part of the corporation's profits, the commissioner explained, while roy alties constituting an expense of the paying concern, are subject to taxes levied on those benefiting from thenu France to Probe Contracts. PARIS, March 3. The chamber of deputies has appointed a commis sion to examine into -contracts made by the government during the war. Representative Garner Says Bond Issue Would Decrease All .Government Securities." WASHINGTON, D. C, March 3. Appeals for financial relief for former service men were' countered today before the house ways and means committee by. statements that any money grant, necessitating iurtner bond issues, would be an additional burden on taxpayers. Representative Hull, democrat, of Tennessee, said $800,000,000 increased taxes must be raised to meet present war expenditures without granting cent to the service men. "With a bonus we would be forced to establish the most oppressive sys tern of taxes in the world," he added. Members of congress will not be blacklisted if they oppose additional soldier legislation, Edward H. Hale of the Veterans of Foreign Wars ofj the United States, an organization of 750.000 men. told the"committee. A. discharged officer had written the committee that "the attitude on sol dier legislation will be closely scru tinized and the soldier vote will be mobilized before the next election, "Does this forecast a blacklist by soldiers similar to the blacklist of the American Federation of Labor, because members oppose their de sires?" Representative Rainey asked, and Hale replied in the negative. Representative Garner, democrat, of Texas, said a bond issue in the immediate future would decrease by 10 per cent the market value of pres ent government obligations. "This alone would result in an ac tual loss of $2,600,000 in the value of property held by millions of peo ple," he said. Solution of the problem is for the ingenious minds of the committee members. Jack Singer of Jersey City, senior vice-commander of the same association, declares. "If financial aid is within the power of your committee we want you to do it, but if it is not, we don't ask the impossible," Singer commented. MEEKER TO WRITE BOOK Chamber of Commerce Is Asked to Contribute Photographs. ABERDEEN, Wash., March 3. (Spe" clal.) Ezra G. Meeker, blazer of the old Oregon trail and who has twice crossed the continent with an ox team and a prairie schooner, is, at the age of 90 years, preparing a book for pub lication, according to a communica tion received by the Aberdeen cham ber of commerce. Mr. Meeker has asked that the chamber send him photographs and local data regarding the city which he can incorporate in the volume. Washington's Seventy Years of Prog ress" Is to be the title. Some of my friends think I am undertaking a pretty big job for my age," says Mr. Meeker, "but with co-operation by the citizens of the state, 1 hope to com plete my volume." RELATIONS UNDER ARREST .orgcry Charge Made Against Man Arranging Bail.. LA GRANDE, Or., March 3. (Spe cial.) While at the courthouse this afternoon making arrangements to put up $500 bail for his sister-in-law, Mrs. Marie Gillum of Boise, Idaho, who was charged with the larceny of a dress from a local store here Saturday night, Ed Kivette was arrested 'on a warrant from Wyoming officials for forgery. Kivette has been in a number of scrapes before, it was said. aA jt . l a 4 MaryPickford Divorced in Nevada Court. ' SOBS BREAK INTO STORY Tale of Desertion Related by Queen of Movies. OLD CLOTHES ARE WORN Name of Douglas Fairbanks Men tioned in Connection With Actiou for Separation. , SAN FRANCISCO, March 3. (Spe cial.) Mary Pickford, queen of the screen, and "America's sweetheart" is no longer the sweetheart of Owen .Moore, ajso of the movies, and erst while identified as "Mary Pickford's husband." Love and matrimony in the photo plays may be one thing, but in real life they are another, for petite Mary has divorced Owen. It was all done quietly in the district court at Minden, a little town near Carson City, Nev.. Tuesday of this week. ' Mrs. Moore had been stopping at the Campbell ranch, near Genoa, Nev., since February 15. It is not far from Minden. Reports are that Moore had lunch in Minden Monday, but he was not in evidence Tuesday and was rep resented in the divorce proceedings only by a lawyer. Tears Dim Mary's Eyra. Me was not there to see the tears trickle down the cheeks of "Little Mary" as she told her tale of domestic woe and Informed the court that the man who had appeared with her in many a loving scene before the cam era had deserted her and gone his way. The court proceedings were all over in. a jiffy and the officials did not even know until the next day that in granting a divorce to Mrs. Owen Moore they were really dealing with one of the most famous of America's movie stars. The plaintiff went into court dressed in old clothes, the press dispatches say very old clothes, and that may have had something to do with it. " s The public had no hint that the marriage of Mary Pickford and Owen Moore was not a love match of the lasting kind until Mrs. Douglas Fair banks announced that she and her acrobatic spouse had agreed to dis agree. She mentioned no names, but she hinted a powerful lot, and the hinting led to the linking of the name of Mary Pickford with the troubles of the Fairbanks. Mrs. "Dour" Not Enthusiastic. "There has been so much gossip for the last 18 months," said Mrs. Fair banks, "I think the time has come to end it. 1 cannot defend any woman with whom my husband's name has been linked. I will not malign her. She is associated with my husband in business. That, of course, is no con cern of mine. I have made up my mind that I will no longer be a shield for her." Now, America would not have thought of associating its "sweet . (Concluded on Page 2, Column 3.) I Moderate Hope Held In Success of Averting Deadlock Shoals Now Rapidly Approaching. WASHINGTON, March 3. While the treaty debate dragged on in the sen ate today without action, the treaty's friends began a final determined ef fort to rescue it from the deadlock toward which all leaders agree It again is headed. Republican and democratic senators joined in the movement, but they were only moderately hopeful of success. They addressed their efforts to the republican reservation to article 10. long the storm center of the whole treaty fight. The subject technically before the senate all day was the Shantung res ervation, but it got only a passing mention. Among other things, the Adriatic question again was brought into the debate, while Senator Reed, democrat, of Missouri, enlivened pro ceedings with a bitter attack on Sen ator Hitchcock of Nebraska, tho ad ministration leader. The course of President Wilson In condemning the proposed Adriatic set tlement was approved by Senator Borah, republican, Idaho. He declared the executive was right in asserting that the United States could not Join in "European settlements unless they were to be based on a new rule of Justice In International contracts. LONG FLIGHT0N TODAY Taconia-Sau Diego Jump in One Day Is Planned. SEATTLE, Wash., March 3. Major Albert D. Smith, United States army aviator, today received . permission from Washington, D. C, to attempt a one-day flight from Camp Lewis, Tacoma, to San Diego. Major Smith, who is at Camp Lewis, said over the telephone today that he would start at daybreak tomorrow. Stops will be made for fuel, oil ana water at Eugene, Red Bluff, San Francisco, Fresno and possibly Los Angeles. Arrangements will be made for quick Bervice at the stopping points. Major Smith will attempt the flight In a DeHaviland plane. In a recent flight to Seattle from San Diego he used a Sopwith machine. In coming north he was seven and one-half hours in the air between San Fran cisco and Seattle. DANCE SHOCKS CHEYENNE "Shimmy" Style of Step Too Much for City Authorities. CHEYENNE, Wyo., March 3. There will be no more "shimmy" dancing in Cheyenne if the city administration has power to stop it. according to a statement by Mayor layior mis aner- noon. "There is no intention to Interfere with decent dancing, saiu me .", but we are not going to stand for anything else. If you want to see two insane looking people. Just watch a couple standing still on a dance floor and squirming as they stare each other in the face. Public opinion wou Id etoD all dancing if this thing is allowed to go too far. We purpose to put the brakes on." INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTKltDAV'S Maximum temperature, ot tne committee on manuiai lurera, '0 d;Rree; minimum. 41 il-sreei. Df which he Is a member. TODAY S Rain; southerly wind.. Hld Qronna offered It, he could Foreign. J hardly have asked with a strniBht Kunslan iiovlet telgnu In splendid slate i I face. iti pointed out. that the au palace ot czars, rage 1. I (hory be IofIged ln ,nc committee on National. .! manufacturers w hen he is chairman of Grain probe delay declared to be pol.tlea. move. Fage J. Wilson takes nna inrouin streets. Fase i. Friends of treaty are determined io averi dead or. 1-agB 1. Bond issue for roldler relief countered In congress, rage j. DnmeMtio. Prohibition as-nts ram Italian aieam-r. 1'ace l. Mary Pickford gets divorce. Pac 1. New ambassador to United Plates from Japan savs bnamuns io ... hands and that Japanese will not swerve from policy. Tags 2. Socialists here to bulla, not to aesiroy. says Morris Mliiquiu i iw i. Paelfle 'ortliwet. Governor Hart not to limit special seasloo of legislature, rage v. Washington stats mprems coun nom. phone rates noi an emergency, t ase .. Hood River "hero leaves mdi irau. Page 5. Court holds I. W. W. rail to snow oven set by I.leutensni t .rim m in anesu raid against hall and conspiracy evi dence Is stopped. Page 1. Slier Mill company sues federal govern ment tor 4-J,miv aamaKca. r K7 o. Rports. Lincoln trouncea jeriereon score ot . to 11. Page Commercial and Marine. Only 30 ears or onions are soia in siaie. Page Scarcity of corn receipts strengthen Chi i cago market, rage Wall street stocks atieeieo tj iurtner credit restrictions, rage .-a. Staamer Nespelem renamed Kobert Toung. rage Portland and Vicinity. Judge Thomas Crawford seeks unpledged trip to democratic eonveniion. rsge l Proposed substitute censorship measure In troduced in city council, rags n. Business men plan eastern excursion. Page 12. . I Zoning plan ordinance is lsld over 'for two weeks. Fage IJ. 150.000 Christian Science alienation penta gon Ulsmiseeu. rsss o. L. F. Eckert to make enori 10 nnn out .today who maae marges on wnicn grand jury indictment for profiteering is based. Page 8. Eleven jurors pas-ed In trial of three com munists, rage 8. Alliance sain to have slated postmaster n succeed Myers. Page IS. terchurch worjd movement la outlined. Page 15. ' Arthur L. Flnley ordered by court not to drive automomio lor iour mon.ns. Page 15. ' Weather rvpo.-t, data ami forecast. Tags li. IN PROBE DELAY Investigation of Grain Board Hits Snag. GRONNA'S MOVE QUESTIONED Reed Resolution Held Up in Committee. ATTACK ON HOOVER SEEN Author of Mote Denies L'hurgr, Saying He Sees Tno Sides to M cry Case and Wants Justice. O P. E G O N I A N NKWS BUREAI, Washington, March 3. Frnator Rerd't resolution, provldinc for an lnvetlE tlon of tho United Slates Crsln cor poration, with particular reference tt certain charges contained In a report of a federal grand Jury sitting at Spokane, was hung up today In ths senate committee on contingent tx penses. It could not be learned at the offices of the committee, of mhlrh i"enstor Caldrr of New York is chairman, how soon a report will be made. It Is understood, however, that a report will be forthcoming shortly upon which the senate will order the in vestigation. There is such a strong; odor ot politics about the resolution that there was a disposition generally around the rapltol today to discuss It as a political move. It was com monly referred to as an attack on Herbert Hoover, as the result of a bipartisan understanding to which, however, only possibly two or three democrats and as many republican! are parties. Ileed Dea Ira Inference. Senator Reed, however, disclaimed that there was politics In it, assert ing that he always recognized the possibility cf there being two aides to every case. Political significance was seen in the fact that the resolu tion came from Senator Reed of Mis souri, instead of being Introduced by Senator Uronna of North Dakota, chairman of the Semite committee of agriculture, who was the natural sponsor for such a resolution. In laying before the senate the re port of the Spokane grand Jury or such parts of It as were carried In a dispatch published Sunday in a Washington newsper. Senator Fer nald of Maino suggested an inquiry by the agricultural committee. That Senator Gronna. republican, should have yielded to Senator Reed, a demo crat, to introduce the resolution looked to most observers like a cunning piece of politics. 'To have Senator Gronna offer tha resolution mignt have looked like ' republican attempt to sshsII th work ings of a federal wartime organisa tion hl'h operated by the authority of President Wilson under o ers vested In him by consress. Ry being permitted to offer the resolution. Sen ator Reed gains the advantage of Ret ting the Invest igdtion Into the hand! powerful committee on agri- powerful committee on agr culture, to which an Investigation uf this character properly belongs. Senator Gronna being a member of the committee on manufacturers will be able to apply the probe to til officers of the grain corporation quit us freel;' as if the agricultural com mittee of which he la chairman sen to condi.i t the Investigation. Senator Gronna Is- suspected of longing to get Herbert Hoover a-nd Julius Barnes, president of tho grain corpoiatlon, before him for soma sharp questions. Knrnes was appoint ed by,Hooer Willi the latter l head of the food administration, and Senator Gronna has shown a very cordial dislike for both men. It was a statement by liarnes re cently which upset the Gronna bill to repeal the government wheat guar antee and changed hat was designed for a dagger thrust at the grain cor poration into a boomerang. The North Dakota senator thought he was mak ing a strong play to the farmers when he Introduced th bill, but after the publication of the Karnes Mat, ment h was denounced by wheat crowers throughout th length and breadth of the land and was com pelled to resort to the unusual pro cedure of withdrawing his bill, after It was reported out. Hoover May Supersede ft Best. At any rat this investigation will be followed closely with the expecta tion of developing more partisanship of mixed varieties than has ao far ap peared iln any other inquiry. Herbert Hoover's unlabeled presidential boom is likely to be mora of an issue than the manner of handling of th wheat crop. Mr. Hoover and Mr. Barnes will not be without friends if the investiga tion Is carried on by th entire com mittee, because there are several sen ators on the commltte who have con siderable respect for both of them. Senator McNary of Oregon is especial ly close to Mr. Barnes, to whom h pa gone several times to serine l- (Cuauuiiwd a I aii li, lu.uinu I.)